By turns teasing and terrifying, laconic and luminous, the stories in this anthology are drawn from sources as diverse as Borges, Nabokov, Garcia-Marquez, and traditional Japanese folklore, and yet they ultimately reside in a slyly subversive literary world that is all their own. Blending an uncompromising ethical vision with exuberant, free-wheeling imagery and bracing formal experimentation, the five short stories and three novellas included in We, the Children of Cats show the full range and force of Hoshino's imagination. The stories include a man and woman who find their genders and sexua.Přečíst více...

Preface To All of You Reading This in English --
Stories --
Paper Woman (2000) --
The No Fathers Club (2006) --
Chino (2000) --
We, the Children of Cats (2001) --
Air (2006) --
Novellas --
Sand Planet (2002) --
Treason Diary (1998) --
A Milonga for the Melted Moon (1999) --
Afterword: The Politics of Impossible Transformation.

by Tomoyuki Hoshino ; edited and translated by Brian Bergstrom ; with an additional translation by Lucy Fraser.

Anotace:

By turns teasing and terrifying, laconic and luminous, the stories in this anthology are drawn from sources as diverse as Borges, Nabokov, Garcia-Marquez, and traditional Japanese folklore, and yet they ultimately reside in a slyly subversive literary world that is all their own. Blending an uncompromising ethical vision with exuberant, free-wheeling imagery and bracing formal experimentation, the five short stories and three novellas included in We, the Children of Cats show the full range and force of Hoshino's imagination. The stories include a man and woman who find their genders and sexua.

"Preface To All of You Reading This in English -- Stories -- Paper Woman (2000) -- The No Fathers Club (2006) -- Chino (2000) -- We, the Children of Cats (2001) -- Air (2006) -- Novellas -- Sand Planet (2002) -- Treason Diary (1998) -- A Milonga for the Melted Moon (1999) -- Afterword: The Politics of Impossible Transformation."@en

"By turns teasing and terrifying, laconic and luminous, the stories in this anthology are drawn from sources as diverse as Borges, Nabokov, Garcia-Marquez, and traditional Japanese folklore, and yet they ultimately reside in a slyly subversive literary world that is all their own. Blending an uncompromising ethical vision with exuberant, free-wheeling imagery and bracing formal experimentation, the five short stories and three novellas included in We, the Children of Cats show the full range and force of Hoshino's imagination. The stories include a man and woman who find their genders and sexua."@en